Exploring Responsiveness in the WordPress Theme Customizer

We can’t ignore the mobile world when we have a website. For instance, if your articles are shared on social networks, chances are these links will be seen on a smartphone.

If you want visitors to engage with your website, you need to provide a good experience on mobile. You have to use a responsive theme.

In WordPress 4.5, a new responsive view was introduced in the Theme Customizer. This article will cover what is the responsive view in the Theme Customizer, why it’s useful and, finally, how to use it as a developer.

What Is the Responsive View

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The responsive view allows you to visualize your website in another format than the one you’re currently using. For instance, you will be able to see how your website is displayed on a smartphone, directly in your desktop browser, without the need to use a real mobile device.

It’s really useful, as you can test on a smaller device changes you make in your theme with the Theme Customizer, without having to save them first. That means you won’t break anything just because you needed to test on a mobile device.

Basically, the only thing the responsive view will do is reduce the frame where you view your website. It’s more or less what happens when you resize your browser’s window, or when you use your browser’s own responsive view.

Changing the window’s size (or the viewport’s size in the case of the browser’s responsive view) is enough to see what your website looks like on a smaller devices. However, there’s an issue when you’re using the Theme Customizer: the sidebar (the customizer itself) will also be resized. If you want to test on very small devices like a smartphone, it’s not really practical.

The advantage of using the Theme Customizer’s responsive view is that only the website’s preview is resized: the only thing which is resized is the only thing you want to test. You can then test changes, faster and easier.

Moreover, a classical user won’t necessarily know that there’s a responsive view in their browser, and they won’t necessarily have the habits to resize their browser’s window to test the view. As the Theme Customizer’s responsive view is easy and clear to use, it’s a good tool.

How To Use the Responsive View

To use the responsive view you need to be in the Theme Customizer. To access it you can use the ‘Customize’ entry in the WordPress dashboard under the ‘Appearance’ menu. You can also use the “Customize” button in the top bar present on every page of your website once you’re logged in.

The Theme Customizer is split into two parts: the website’s preview on the right, and the sidebar on the left to change the details. At the bottom of this sidebar you can find the buttons allowing you to enable the responsive view.

Several formats are available: by default we find the desktop view, the tablet view (in portrait mode) and the smartphone view (also in portrait mode). To enable a view, you have to click on the corresponding button. The website’s preview will then be resized, without needing to do anything more.

Let’s be clear, in case you’re wondering, these buttons won’t resize your website itself. They are just a way to preview what your website looks like on smaller devices. If you enable the smartphone view, a user visiting your website will continue to see it in full size!

Choosing the Views to Show

If you’re developing a theme, either for you or for sharing it (or both!), you have to make it responsive. As a developer, you’ll want to use your browser’s tools also to test the responsiveness of your theme, as they are more complete than the Theme Customizer’s responsive view.

However, this view will be preferred by your users, as it’s more comfortable to navigate with the Theme Customizer. That’s why you can’t ignore this responsive view.

The good news is that you don’t have to do anything to enable the responsive view: once a user has updated their WordPress installation to Version 4.5 (or higher), they will be able to use it. However, you can manage the available views, if you need it.

For instance, if your theme is not responsive, you can disable the responsive view. You can also disable a specific view: if for some reason your theme can only be used on a mobile phone, you can only enable this view and even disable the desktop view. Another possible application is simply choosing the default view.

To manage the responsive views, you can use the customize_previewable_devices filter. The function used in this filter must admit one parameter (the available views) and return the views to show. Below is the basic code to implement in the functions.php file of your theme:

Once WordPress applied the customize_previewable_devices filter, it will list the views following this array. The first entry having the default key set to true will be the default view (even if there are other entries that have this key set to true). The label entries are not displayed on the screen, not even in a title attribute. They are used by screen readers for example. Chances are great that you don’t need to change their values.

If you want to disable a view, you have to remove the corresponding entry. For example, if you want to disable the tablet view, use the following line of code in the function called by the filter:

<?php
unset($devices['tablet']);
?>

To disable the responsive view, return an empty array:

<?php
$devices = array();
// OR:
return array();
?>

Finally, to change the default view, we need to do two things: setting the default attribute of the current default view to false, then setting the default attribute of the view we want to set as default to true. For example, with the following code, the users will always see the mobile view by default.

Customizing the Sizes of the Different Views

The desktop view will take all the available space, as we would expect it to. However, maybe you wonder what are the different sizes used by the other views.

The mobile view simulates a screen in portrait mode. It’s set to 320 × 480 pixels. The tablet view, also in portrait mode, simulates a screen of 6 × 9 inches (between 10 and 11 inches in diagonal).

These are the default values. They are set in a CSS file and you can’t customize them through the filter we used above. However, if you really want to customize these sizes, it’s possible by using your own CSS file, without editing a WordPress core file (which is never recommended).

Create a new CSS file in your theme’s folder. I named it custom-responsive-views.css and placed it at the root of my theme’s folder but feel free to choose whatever you want for these details.

Then, in the functions.php file of your theme, use the admin_enqueue_scripts action to enqueue your style.

Now WordPress will read this file and the changes will be taken into account. Let’s take a concrete example and assume that you want to display the tablet view in landscape mode. Then you can use the following CSS code in the file you just created.

As you can see, don’t forget to adapt the margin, to always center the view. If you want to customize the mobile view, use the .preview-mobile class instead of the .preview-tablet one. The desktop view uses the .preview-desktop class. Thanks to these simple CSS rules, you can choose the size you want for the different views. Below is the tablet view I obtain with the above CSS.

Creating a New Responsive View

Contrary to built-in browsers tools, WordPress’ responsive view doesn’t allow the resizing of the view. That means that the user won’t be able to resize the mobile view if they want to see a bigger device for instance.

Maybe we will see such a feature in the future. In the meantime, if you really want to provide a bigger mobile view or a landscape mode for the tablet view without overriding the default views, it’s still possible by creating your own view.

To do that, let’s return in our callback function called by the filter customize_previewable_devices. As we saw above, WordPress will list all the entries in the $devices array as buttons. Then, to create a new view, add your own entry, as below.

You can choose this view as the default one if you want to, by adding the key default set to true (but don’t forget to disable the current default view as we saw above).

With this entry, WordPress will generate the corresponding button, with the right JavaScript callback: when the button is hit, the website preview will automatically take the right CSS class. In the example above for instance, the preview will get the class preview-tablet-landscape.

We have a problem here: the button we created is near to be invisible. You can find it if you know where to search, but it’s not really what we want. We need to add some CSS to display it the right way (i.e. the way other buttons are displayed). We will use the CSS file we created in the previous part to do that.

The icon displayed in the button is in a :before pseudo-element. Your button can be found thanks to the name you provided. With the example above, the CSS to use to retrieve our button’s icon is .wp-full-overlay-footer .devices .preview-tablet-landscape:before. Then, all you have to do is indicate the content, an icon to display. WordPress’ buttons use the Dashicons font. You can retrieve the whole list of available icons on WordPress Developer Resources website.

In our example, we have a tablet so we choose the icon f471. The CSS is then as below.

However, our tablet is in landscape mode while the tablet shown in the icon is in portrait mode. We will here use the power of CSS to transform the icon: with the CSS below, the tablet is now shown in landscape mode.

You still need to do one thing: defining the size corresponding to your new view. This can be achieved the same way we changed a view above, thanks to the same CSS file. Below are the CSS rules corresponding to our tablet in landscape mode.

Setting a JavaScript Trigger

It’s possible to define a JavaScript function that’ll be called each time the responsive view is changed. It’s useful if, for example, your theme reacts to the resize event. In the Theme Customizer, the window is not resized by itself, so this event won’t be triggered.

You can then use the function wp.customize.previewedDevice.bind(). This callback can use an argument: a string representing the new view. For instance, if the view changes to the mobile one, this string will be mobile. In the case of the view we created above, it will be tablet-landscape.

Closing Words

The Theme Customizer’s responsive view is useful for the end user who wants to easily see their changes in all the available devices. Disabling some views and adding your own views can be achieved fairly easily. It’s just the first version of this feature. Maybe we’ll see some new things in future versions, like view resizing for instance.

If you want to retrieve the examples we created in this article, I created an example plugin you can download right here. Note that this plugin exists for only one reason: it’s simpler (and clearer) to provide an example plugin than an example theme. However, playing with the Theme Customizer as we do in this plugin is theme-related functionality, so it should always be done in a theme.

Currently a math student, Jérémy is a passionate guy who is interested in many fields, particularly in the high tech world for which he covers the news everyday on some blogs, and web development which takes much of his free time. He loves learning new things and sharing his knowledge with others.